Museum special exhibit explores Alaska earthquakes

18-12-2018 Anonymous (not verified)

Newspaper digitized by Eric EngmanShAKe includes dozens of newspaper headlines from more than a century of Interior Alaska earthquakes. This was the front page of Fairbanks Daily News-Miner on July 22, 1937, where news of the recent earthquake shares space with news of Amelia Earhart, then missing for 20 days.

A new exhibit at the University of Alaska Museum of the North will allow visitors to experience earthquakes through history, science and technology.

The exhibit, “ShAKe: Earthquakes in Interior Alaska,” opened in November and will be on display in the museum’s special exhibits gallery through next fall.

Guest curator Carl Tape, a University of Alaska Fairbanks seismologist and associate professor, found inspiration for the exhibit in the pages of Fairbanks’ local newspaper, the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner.

“It started with the discovery of a poor photocopy of the front page of the July 22, 1937, edition,” Tape said. “In huge letters at the top, it said ‘FAIRBANKS HIT BY ITS WORST QUAKE.’ On the same front page there was a story about searching for Amelia Earhart, as well as an ad by John Butrovich Jr., namesake of the UA statewide administration building, hawking earthquake insurance.”

He also recalled buying a copy of the News-Miner in October 2014, right after an earthquake in Minto also shook Fairbanks. The cashier seemed surprised that there were earthquakes at all in the region, Tape said. “With this exhibit, I wanted to bring a century of earthquake stories back to life and remind people that this is earthquake country.”

Photo by Tamara MartzWhen earthquakes occur in Alaska, the exhibit responds with lights, sound and a map to show visitors what just happened. Earthquakes in Alaska greater than magnitude 1 occur about every 15 minutes.

Newspapers are a large part of the exhibit, which includes a copy of the first edition of the News-Miner and original news coverage of earthquake events from 1904 to 2014. Other exhibit highlights include a seismic stomp test, fault-zone rocks, an earthquake alarm and real-time map of Alaska earthquakes, and interviews with Alaska Native elders recalling historical earthquakes.

“The central part of the special exhibit illustrates why global tectonic forces have conspired to make Alaska responsible for 84 percent of earthquake energy in the United States,” said Roger Topp, the museum’s director of exhibits. “The perimeter of the exhibit takes visitors on a tour of Interior Alaska’s earthquakes that spans more than a century, using pages from Interior newspapers.”

Major earthquakes are part of the past, present and future of Alaska, Topp said. “This is an important story and call to awareness for Interior Alaska residents and for visitors to our state.”
ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Carl Tape, 907-474-5456, ctape@alaska.edu; Roger Topp, 907-474-6985, rmtopp@alaska.edu.

Last updated: Dec 19, 2018

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